Wider location
This view places the station in its surrounding district, coast or industrial corridor.
Dungeness B closed after long operational difficulties and now sits in the unusual landscape of shingle, sea and decommissioning infrastructure.
OpenStreetMap view showing the actual atlas coordinate for Dungeness B, with a wider local view and a closer site-focused view.
This view places the station in its surrounding district, coast or industrial corridor.
This tighter map makes the specific site position much clearer for the station record.
This summary focuses on the key facts that explain the station’s role in the wider UK generation system.
These timeline entries highlight the main milestones for the site, including commissioning, major changes, closure and current status where relevant.
Entered service in an earlier generation of the UK nuclear programme.
The station stopped generating and entered post-operational work such as defuelling, care and maintenance, or site restoration.
Nuclear sites remain active long after closure because the clean-up cycle is measured in decades rather than months.
Power-station siting reflects engineering requirements, fuel and water logistics, grid access, industrial geography and the planning frameworks of the period in which the site was developed. Dungeness B should therefore be read as part of a wider infrastructure system rather than as an isolated structure in the landscape.
These notes highlight the main structures, layout characteristics and historic changes associated with the station. They are intended as a concise interpretive layer alongside the reference data, timeline and technical diagrams.
Magnox, AGR, PWR and EPR each imply different buildings, containment forms, fuel systems and visual signatures.
Coastal siting often reflected cooling-water needs, grid access and strategic planning rather than scenic coincidence.
Unlike fossil stations, nuclear sites usually remain highly active long after electricity generation has ceased.
This record can be expanded further with licensed site plans, archival photography, demolition or redevelopment updates, fuller unit-level timelines and linked planning or environmental documentation.